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Iran Conflict 2026
10APR

Iran offers Hormuz first; US rejects

4 min read
08:05UTC

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Sultan Haitham in Muscat on Sunday and Vladimir Putin in St Petersburg on Monday that Tehran will reopen the Strait of Hormuz before any nuclear settlement. The Trump administration rejected the framing the same day.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran offered Hormuz reopening before any nuclear deal; Washington rejected the framing and produced no counter-text.

Abbas Araghchi, Iran's Foreign Minister, told Sultan Haitham in Muscat on Sunday 26 April and Vladimir Putin in St Petersburg on Monday 27 April that Iran will reopen the Strait of Hormuz before any nuclear settlement, decoupling two tracks Tehran's prior position had bound together . The State Department rejected the framing the same day, with officials telling the Associated Press the Hormuz proposal 'doesn't address the core issue' of nuclear weapons 1. Pakistan now holds a written three-phase Iranian text that sequences Hormuz reopening and the lift of the US blockade first; nuclear talks come 'later' .

The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly a fifth of seaborne crude and a third of LNG; the blockade Tehran has run since the IRGC closure on Day 1 is what Brent has been pricing for sixty days. Tehran's prior position, held since the Islamabad round collapsed, bound the strait to nuclear so that any de-escalation produced both at once. The text now in Pakistan's hands separates them. Iran is offering to lift the blockade without first locking in the nuclear settlement Trump has named as his only public condition for ending the war.

The sequencing mirrors the Joint Plan of Action Iran and the P5+1 signed in November 2013, which front-loaded reversible enrichment caps so that an instrument could be signed without resolving final-status weapons questions; that architecture later ratified the 2015 deal. The 2026 offer has the same shape. The Trump administration has not staffed a final-status negotiating team, has signed no Iran executive instrument across sixty days and has produced no counterpart text. The War Powers Resolution clock corrected on 22 April runs out at 12:01 EDT on Friday 1 May; three days from close on Tuesday.

A counter-reading is worth flagging: the IRGC controls the strait, so the offer's operational delivery is uncertain and may be theatrical, designed to put rejection on Washington's record while protecting the nuclear file. The structural shift survives that critique. Iran's prior text linked the two files; the text now in Pakistan's hands separates them. Whether Tehran would deliver is one question; whether Tehran has rewritten the deal on offer is a separate one, and on the second question the answer is yes.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran has offered to reopen the world's most important oil shipping lane without waiting for a nuclear deal first. Previously, Iran said nuclear talks and the strait had to be resolved together. The White House said no, because it wants the nuclear issue settled first. Three days remain on the legal clock that started the war.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Hormuz-first offer emerged from a structural constraint inside Tehran, not from diplomatic generosity. Araghchi's civilian track cannot deliver nuclear concessions because nuclear authority sits with Mojtaba Khamenei and the IRGC. The Foreign Ministry can only offer what it controls: the diplomatic framing around Hormuz. Separating the strait from nuclear talks is therefore the only concession the Foreign Ministry can make unilaterally.

The White House rejection reflects a parallel structural constraint: without a staffed National Security Council Iran policy process , vacant since Witkoff and Kushner's Pakistan trip stood down on 25 April , accepting the Hormuz-first framing would require the President personally to sign an instrument with no interagency review behind it. The administration has not produced that kind of Iran paper in 60 days.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Pakistan now holds a written three-phase Iranian ceasefire text with no US counterpart instrument to receive it; if 1 May passes empty, the text's value depreciates as a negotiating anchor.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Risk

    European Northwood Hormuz framework becomes the operational default if no US instrument arrives before 1 May, embedding European legal preferences (UNCLOS transit passage, NATO proportionality doctrine) as the baseline.

    Short term · 0.75
  • Precedent

    Iran's written separation of Hormuz from nuclear tracks gives any future US administration a structurally easier entry point: accept the 2026 text as the interim phase rather than reopening from zero.

    Medium term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #82 · Iran writes Phase 1; Washington still has no pen

PBS NewsHour· 28 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Lloyd's of London
Lloyd's of London
The Joint War Committee left Hormuz war-risk premiums at $10-14 million per voyage on 25 May, declining to move on Brent's 5% fall. The JWC's protocol requires a UN Security Council resolution or bilateral government certification letter before de-listing, and neither has arrived: a verbal understanding does not satisfy the formal condition the reinsurance market's treaty terms require.
Gulf Arab producers
Gulf Arab producers
Saudi Arabia and UAE depend on Hormuz for their own crude exports; Aramco CEO Nasser has warned no oil market recovery arrives until 2027 if the blockade continues past mid-June. Monday's $98.96 Brent settlement shortens nothing for Gulf producers without a signed instrument and a Pentagon mine-clearance timeline that runs up to six months post-ceasefire.
Qatar
Qatar
Qatar holds $12bn of frozen Iranian assets at the centre of the sequencing dispute but cannot release them without explicit US Treasury authorisation, given the original freeze was a US instrument. As the asset-holding state, Qatar's leverage is real but passive: it is the escrow holder, not the decision-maker, and any resolution requires US Treasury sign-off that Trump has withheld.
Pakistan
Pakistan
With both Prime Minister Sharif and army chief Munir simultaneously in Beijing on 25 May, Pakistan has for the first time consolidated its civilian and military mediation tracks under China's roof. Munir's direct Tehran-to-Beijing flight signals that the security and financial threads of the sequencing problem are now being worked in parallel rather than sequentially.
China
China
Beijing hosted Pakistan's principal mediators and Iran's China envoy Ghalibaf simultaneously on 25 May while its banking regulator capped new state-bank lending to five sanctioned refiners. China is simultaneously the most credible third-party underwriter of the $12bn sequencing and the state whose institutions face live OFAC secondary-sanctions exposure if the deadlock persists through GL V's expiry.
United States
United States
Trump posted on 24 May that the blockade holds until a deal is certified and signed, ruling out the informal MOU structure both sides had been building. The 'certified, and signed' condition is the first operational bar Trump has attached in 87 days, but it arrived without an executive instrument, maintaining the gap between posted ultimatum and signed US policy.